Searching for Memories, Sudoku, Implicit Check Bits, and the Iterative Use of Not-Always-Correct Rapid Neural Computation | MIT Press Journals & Magazine | IEEE Xplore

Searching for Memories, Sudoku, Implicit Check Bits, and the Iterative Use of Not-Always-Correct Rapid Neural Computation


Abstract:

The algorithms that simple feedback neural circuits representing a brain area can rapidly carry out are often adequate to solve easy problems but for more difficult probl...Show More

Abstract:

The algorithms that simple feedback neural circuits representing a brain area can rapidly carry out are often adequate to solve easy problems but for more difficult problems can return incorrect answers. A new excitatory-inhibitory circuit model of associative memory displays the common human problem of failing to rapidly find a memory when only a small clue is present. The memory model and a related computational network for solving Sudoku puzzles produce answers that contain implicit check bits in the representation of information across neurons, allowing a rapid evaluation of whether the putative answer is correct or incorrect through a computation related to visual pop-out. This fact may account for our strong psychological feeling of right or wrong when we retrieve a nominal memory from a minimal clue. This information allows more difficult computations or memory retrievals to be done in a serial fashion by using the fast but limited capabilities of a computational module multiple times. The mathematics of the excitatory-inhibitory circuits for associative memory and for Sudoku, both of which are understood in terms of energy or Lyapunov functions, is described in detail.
Published in: Neural Computation ( Volume: 20, Issue: 5, May 2008)
Page(s): 1119 - 1164
Date of Publication: May 2008
Print ISSN: 0899-7667

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